Tips

✶ If you like a particular prayer or reading and want to come back to it later, just click the “Add to Favorites” button on the top left of every post (just below the title and author information). To see your list of favorites, visit your Favorites page. (Favorites are stored in your browser’s cookie files.)

The Open Siddur Project is a free and open source software project founded around a community of folk passionate about the siddur. We are developing an online collaborative publishing platform for crafting custom siddurim, for preserving the diversity of Jewish prayer traditions, and for sharing translations, commentary, t’fillot, meditations, and art in the siddur.

The Jewish Day School systems are filled with many talented students, and we would like to reach out to those interested in technology and computer science, particularly in high schools. The Open Siddur Project offers an opportunity for these students to participate in a real free software and open source project that is also relevant to the entire Jewish community. We invite them to participate in development discussions, provide original research, learn and write programs in a number of computer languages, edit, proofread, and correct texts, and work with others of many different backgrounds, in a pluralistic Jewish context.

Students who participate will be treated like adults and will be expected to interact with the same level of dereḥ eretz (common courtesy) as all the other participants in the Open Siddur.

If you are a teacher or school administrator interested in this project for your students, we would just like to ask that participation in the project never be compulsory, for example, that it never be used as a homework assignment or classroom exercise.

(*) While we are not a commercial entity, in case we ever do fall under the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998, we avoid collecting personal information from students under the age of 13.

The Open Siddur Project is a volunteer-driven, non-profit, non-denominational, non-prescriptive, gratis & libré Open Access archive of contemplative praxes, liturgical readings, and Jewish prayer literature (historic and contemporary, familiar and obscure) composed in every era, region, and language Jews have ever prayed. Our goal is to provide a platform for sharing open-source resources, tools, and content for individuals and communities crafting their own prayerbook (siddur). Through this we hope to empower personal autonomy, preserve customs, and foster creativity in religious culture. If you like what you've found here, please help keep our project alive and online with your financial contribution.☁

ויהי נעם אדני אלהינו עלינו ומעשה ידינו כוננה עלינו ומעשה ידינו כוננהו "May the pleasantness of אדֹני our elo’ah be upon us; may our handiwork be established for us — our handiwork, may it be established."–Psalms 90:17

All fonts rendered through CSS @font-face are licensed with either an SIL-Open Font License (OFL) or a GNU Public License with a Font Exception clause (GPL+FE).Some images are shared with the now-deprecated CC-BY 2.0 (עברית | English) license.

The views expressed in contributed works represent the views of their creator(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of the Open Siddur Project's developers, its diverse community of contributors, or Jewish Creativity International.